Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Phymatotrichum root rot = cotton root rot Phymatotrichopsis omnivora = Phymatotrichum omnivorum. Powdery mildew Leveillula taurica Oidiopsis sicula [anamorph] = Oidiopsis gossypii Salmonia malachrae. Stigmatomycosis: Ashbya gossypii Eremothecium coryli = Nematospora coryli Aureobasidium pullulans. Rust Cotton rust Puccinia schedonnardii ...
Upload file; Search. Search. Appearance. Donate; ... Download as PDF; Printable version ... Cotton diseases. Pages in category "Cotton diseases" The following 17 ...
Main page; Contents; Current events; Random article; About Wikipedia; Contact us; Donate
The main distinction of byssinosis from other respiratory diseases comes from the initial exposure. Patients who have byssinosis have typically been exposed to cotton or just dust for an extended period of time and experience symptoms of chest tightness and coughing. [3] Patient history should reveal exposure to cotton, flax, hemp, or jute dust.
Resistance to the cotton blight bacteria is one of the primary objectives for cotton plant breeders. Although cotton plant resistance may be to a particular Xcm race, it reveals how the physiological characteristics of plants can effectively aid in plant resistance to diseases and pest attacks.
All Begomovirus species causing cotton leaf curl disease have geminate particles, approximately 18-20 nm in diameter and 30 nm long and a circular, single-stranded DNA genome. All except Cotton leaf crumple virus have a monopartite genome, with all viral products required for replication, systemic movement and whitefly transmission encoded on a ...
Disease management can be difficult as it would be impossible to eliminate the alternate host grass species. However, the utilization of non-susceptible crops in a rotation can decrease infection rate in future cotton crops. An application of Mancozeb foliar fungicide can be used to prevent the disease, [4] but little can be done after ...
he first disease symptom on cotton is the appearance of small, somewhat inconspicuous, pale-green lesions which are the first sign of disease. The lesions then develop into bright yellow spermogonial (conceptacle containing spermatia) pustules, usually on the upper leaf surfaces of the host plant. Spermogonial pustules may also appear on any of ...